Trappist Westvleteren 12 (Bottle)
Product Description:Depth, rarity, and monastic tradition define this legendary Trappist beer from Trappist Westvleteren. Trappist Westvleteren 12 ...
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If you’ve heard peated whisky described as smoky, “medicinal”, or like a campfire, you’re not wrong. But that’s only part of the story. Peated whisky can be coastal and salty, earthy and smouldering, or quietly sweet depending on how it’s made and where it comes from.
This guide breaks it down simply: what peat is, why some whiskies taste smoky, what PPM really means, and where to start if you’re new to peat.
Peated whisky is made using malted barley that has been dried over a peat fire.
Peat is a natural material formed over thousands of years from partially decomposed plants in bogs and wetlands. When it’s burned during malting, the smoke carries aromatic compounds called phenols, which cling to the barley and show up later in the spirit.
That’s where the signature peat character comes from.
At its core, peated whisky tastes smoky, but the style spans a wide spectrum. Common flavour notes include:
Many peated whiskies also carry balancing notes like honey, vanilla, citrus peel, dried fruit, and warming spice from oak. The best ones feel structured and layered, not one-note.
You’ll often hear coastal peated whisky described as 'medicinal'. It usually refers to a mix of iodine, brine, and sea air notes that show up in maritime styles, especially from Scotland’s islands.
While 'medicinal' sounds clinical, in the glass it often translates to a refreshing, clean saltiness that lifts the whisky and balances the weight of the malt.
Peated whisky will have some smoke character, but intensity varies widely. Smoke can read as sweet, earthy, ashy, coastal, or gently herbal depending on the peat source, how heavily the barley is peated, and how the whisky is distilled and matured.
Not all peat tastes the same. It has a sense of place.
Often the boldest and most recognisable peat style. Expect confident smoke, maritime salinity, and that signature coastal edge.
Typically more earthy and dry, with smoke that feels smouldering rather than sea-spray intense.
Australia has some genuinely exciting peated whisky, and Tasmanian peat is a great example of why peat is not one flavour. It often reads more earthy and heather-like compared to the seaweed-and-salt punch of coastal Scottish styles. For local drinkers, it’s a smart way into peat, familiar but still distinctive.
PPM stands for parts per million of phenols in the malted barley. It’s a useful guide, but it does not guarantee how smoky a whisky will taste in the glass. Fermentation, distillation, cask type, and ageing all shape the final result.
Use this as a quick reference:
If you’re not sure where to start, shop by mood. These are bottles worth knowing.
Once you've found your footing, these bottles explore peat with more personality, depth, and edge. Still recognisable. More expressive.
Tip: If you love sherried whisky, try a lightly peated style first. If you enjoy mezcal or smoky cocktails, you may enjoy jumping straight into Islay.
The difference comes down to the malting process.
Neither is better. They just suit different palates and occasions.
If you’re curious, start with lightly peated and work up. If you’re already a peat lover, go straight for Islay. Either way, the right bottle makes peat feel less like a dare and more like a favourite.